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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year music shifts from learning the basics to making real artistic choices. Students take a song from a first idea to a polished performance, deciding how to shape the sound and why. They listen closely to other musicians, explain what a piece is trying to say, and connect it to the time and place it came from. By spring, students can prepare a piece, perform it with intention, and talk about the choices behind it.

Illustration of what students learn in Grades 9-10 Arts: Music
  • Performing music
  • Composing
  • Listening and analysis
  • Music history
  • Self-critique
Source: California Content Standards for California Public Schools
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Starting with musical ideas

    Students begin the year by coming up with their own musical ideas. They draw on songs they love and personal experiences to start short pieces, melodies, or arrangements.

  2. 2

    Shaping and refining pieces

    Students take rough ideas and build them into real pieces. They organize sections, revise weak spots, and polish a finished version they can share with others.

  3. 3

    Preparing music to perform

    Students choose pieces to perform and practice the techniques each one demands. They work on tone, timing, and expression so the performance carries real meaning for the audience.

  4. 4

    Listening and responding

    Students listen closely to music and explain what they hear. They describe what a piece seems to mean, then judge how well it works using clear reasons rather than just personal taste.

  5. 5

    Music in its wider world

    Students look at where music comes from and why it matters. They connect pieces to the time, place, and culture that shaped them, and notice how that history shows up in the sound.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 9.
Connecting
Standard Definition Code

Making music from personal experience

Grades 9-10

Students connect what they know from life and other subjects to the music they create or perform, letting personal experience shape the choices they make as musicians.

CA-MU:Cn10.9-10.HsProficient

Music's role in history and culture

Grades 9-10

Students connect a piece of music to the time, place, and culture it came from, explaining how that context shapes what the music means and how it sounds.

CA-MU:Cn11.9-10.HsProficient
Creating
Standard Definition Code

Coming up with musical ideas

Grades 9-10

Students brainstorm and develop original musical ideas, exploring how different sounds, structures, or styles can shape a piece before committing to a direction.

CA-MU:Cr1.9-10.HsProficient

Develop and organize original music ideas

Grades 9-10

Students take a musical idea in progress and shape it into something more complete, making deliberate choices about structure, sound, and direction until the piece holds together.

CA-MU:Cr2.9-10.HsProficient

Finishing and polishing a musical composition

Grades 9-10

Students revise a piece of music based on feedback, then finish it to a level they're ready to share or perform.

CA-MU:Cr3.9-10.HsProficient
Performing/Presenting/Producing
Standard Definition Code

Choosing music to perform and why

Grades 9-10

Students choose pieces to perform and explain why each one fits the moment, the audience, and their own abilities as a musician.

CA-MU:Pr4.9-10.HsProficient

Refining music for performance

Grades 9-10

Students rehearse and refine their music until it's ready to perform in front of an audience. That means fixing technical problems, sharpening dynamics, and making deliberate choices about how the piece should sound.

CA-MU:Pr5.9-10.HsProficient

Perform music with intention and meaning

Grades 9-10

Students perform music with clear artistic intent, making deliberate choices about dynamics, phrasing, and expression so the audience understands the feeling or idea behind the piece.

CA-MU:Pr6.9-10.HsProficient
Responding
Standard Definition Code

Listening closely to music and analyzing it

Grades 9-10

Students listen to a piece of music and break down what they hear: how rhythm, melody, or structure shape the way the music feels and what the composer might have intended.

CA-MU:Re7.9-10.HsProficient

Reading meaning in musical works

Grades 9-10

Students analyze a piece of music and explain what the composer or performer was going for, pointing to specific choices in melody, rhythm, or structure as evidence.

CA-MU:Re8.9-10.HsProficient

Judging music with your own criteria

Grades 9-10

Students set specific criteria, such as rhythmic accuracy or tonal balance, and use those criteria to judge a piece of music. The focus is on reasoned evaluation, not just personal taste.

CA-MU:Re9.9-10.HsProficient
Common Questions
  • What does a proficient music student look like by the end of the year?

    Students can create a short original piece, rehearse and perform it with care, and explain the choices they made. They can also listen to a piece of music and talk about what it means, how it works, and whether it succeeds.

  • How can I support music practice at home if I am not a musician?

    Ask students to play or sing what they are working on and then explain one thing they want to improve. Short, focused practice of 15 to 20 minutes a few times a week beats one long session on the weekend.

  • How should I sequence creating, performing, and responding across the year?

    Most teachers run all four strands in parallel rather than in blocks. A typical unit pairs a performance piece with a short composition or arrangement task and built-in listening and feedback days, so students create, rehearse, and reflect on the same musical ideas.

  • My child says they are just playing notes. Is that enough at this level?

    Not quite. At this stage students should also be making interpretive choices about tone, phrasing, and expression, and be able to say why. Asking what mood or message a piece is trying to send is a good prompt at home.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Refining work after a first draft and applying clear criteria when evaluating music are the two that tend to lag. Students often want to perform a piece once and move on, so building in revision cycles and shared rubrics pays off all year.

  • How much music history and cultural context should be part of the class?

    Enough to ground every major piece students play or write. When students know where a song comes from and what it meant to its first listeners, their performance and analysis get sharper, so a short context note for each unit usually does the job.

  • How do I know if my child is ready for the next level of music?

    Look for a student who can prepare a piece on their own, give a thoughtful opinion about music they hear, and connect a song to something in their own life or the wider world. Confidence performing in front of others is a strong sign too.